For years, Curren Price was seen as a steady political fixture in South Los Angeles, presiding over neighborhoods desperate for honest investment and fair representation. Now, the same votes he once touted as wins for his district are being recast as potential evidence in a far-reaching corruption case that could end his career and freedom. At the center sits more than $800,000 in payments to his wife’s company, flowing from agencies and developers whose projects he helped advance.
The legal stakes are enormous, but the emotional stakes for residents may be even higher. In communities already skeptical of City Hall, the idea that public trust may have been leveraged for private gain cuts deep. As prosecutors assemble voting records, contracts, and financial disclosures, Los Angeles is left to confront an unsettling possibility: that the system meant to protect its most vulnerable neighborhoods may have been quietly working against them.